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Changed designs for the new lab building to house the half-billion-dollar BP–funded Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI) have forced Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to launch a new environmental impact review.

EBI programs will focus on developing genetically modified organisms and plant crops to provide a new generation of transportation fuels, called biofuels by supporters and agrofuels by critics, who fear the program will led to further corporate colonization of the Third World.

The Helios Building has been redesigned with a lower profile (from a four- and five-story original to a three- and four-story revision), an extended footprint and a reduction in overall floor space from the original 160,000 square feet to 144,000.

The proposed location has been shifted as well, from the original rectangular site directly facing the lab’s Molecular Foundry to a more serpentine footprint extended to the southeast and facing Building 62.

Stephan Volker, who represented Friends of Strawberry Canyon in a lawsuit that challenged both the earlier project’s EIR and the UC Board of Regents approval of the project, said Tuesday that the change of plans might be an improvement over the project he had challenged in court.